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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  April 6, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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special coverage, fox weather. >> and don't forget to bring your shades. also, don't forget judge, i'm ok tour. you guys ready? april 20th. beach haven, new jersey. that's lbi, april 27th. vero beach, florida. may. >> we've just added may 5th. mendham, new jersey. may 25th. yorba linda. say that five times fast tonight. jesse watters. primetime earthquake mania. jessict beforea okay, so as manu know, i'm due to have another baby just a week or so. and i wanted to mention something really cool that we're doing for thiglasses new little lady and also did for cleo for preserving her daughter's cor d blood. when i deliver, cord blood can already be used to help treat over 80 conditions, including certain cancers and immune disorders. there are also hundreds of clinical trials to find more possible uses for cord blood. >> hopefully there'll be more ft ♪ [the star-spangled banner]
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♪ [the star-spangled banner] [the star-spangled banner] ♪ [the star-spangled banner] ♪ [the star-spangled banner]
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will: good saturday morning. welcome to "fox and friends" weekend. will cain, rachel campos duffy, pete hegseth. i waived. rachel: explain why. it is a rule. no way to make it look masculine. it just isn't. rachel: how do you -- will: it just doesn't work. you can't do it in a masculine way. pete: that is your modified -- will: howdy doody style is not good. rachel: just be confident in your masculinity and don't worry about it. will: i don't think you can
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salute if you weren't in the military. it is a new rule. pete: i agree with you sort of. rachel: good morning. yesterday on the bottom line on foxbusiness victor davis hanson was a guest, talking about a pc role for fox news, my husband, sean duffy, things going pretty well. anyway. victor davis hanson talked about a lot of people talking about -- he is saying what we are all thinking. the title of the piece is 11 ways biden and his handlers are hell-bent on destroying america. here's the 11 ways he says. one, you can wipe out the 2,000 mile border if you want to destroy america, you can wrap a
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$20,000 national debt, you can subsidize enemies like iran and china, multiracial democracy, you can redefine identity is tribal affiliation, recalibrate violent crime as understandable and a cry of the heart expressions of social justice, emasculate the military by using non-meritocratic standards of race, gender, sexual orientation, 77, reinvent the justice system to a laminate political opponents, encourage the fusion of the bureaucratic state with electronic media to perform a powerful force for political audit, surveillance, censorship, number 9, you can war on critical gas and natural gas. number 11 turn universities into indoctrination centers. i would add marxist indoctrination centers.
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here is victor davis hanson on the bottom line. >> those problems of crime, inflation, loss of deterrence, i have never seen an assault on the very system, not that we are letting criminals out, we don't think that assault on violent acts or crimes, we don't prosecute people. we had a porous board but never had no border. we had humiliations abroad but never turned over $60 billion of weapons terrorists, we are in a new phase where this administration is assaulting the mechanisms, the protocols we used to live. it is assault on our civilization rather than lapses of confidence and almost like a nihilistic, angry, destructive urge to destroy the whole system. will: he has an 11 point plan.
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he went on to say four other reasons why this may be happening. it is a product -- pete: they think their socialist agenda is going to work, raging nihilists, revolutionaries who want to erase america or they are just bumbling fools. he says it is probably a combination of one and 3. will: the ones that speak to me on this 11 point diagnosis are one and 2, the 2000 mile border, 35, and number 4, multiracial democracy, redefine identities, tribal affiliation. we are in a unique experiment. most countries, nation state experiments are based on some homogeneity, cultural cohesion, ethnic cohesion.
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this is a unique experiment, truly diverse. has to be tied together by one tribal identity. pete: number 6 sticks with me, emasculating the military. next hour i will announce a new book about that. very intentional thing that has been done, you would say the strongest and robust meritocracy in our country which had to go. rachel: interesting exercise. which one, hard to pick one. i'm concerned about the debt, but you can't love america and shut down gas and make our energy more expensive sorry economy takes. and invented the justice system to indict, convict and a lemonade all political opponents. barack obama is behind so much
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of this. it is clear that president biden isn't and barack obama said his goal was how do you do these socialist policies without americans knowing it is happening and what happened is we are at this point where we are seeing the fruits of it. a lot of the groundwork has been laid down since his term in office and we are seeing fruits. a lot of people are saying thank you for writing this. i'm not crazy. i'm not a conspiracy theorist. somewhat is intentionally trying to make this country worse, destroy it. pete: go to foxnews.com, the 11 points, the reasons why, victor davis hanson, prospective for something we are always kicking around on the show. rachel: there was a rare 4. 8 magnitude earthquake that rattled the northeast. even lady liberty was shaken up
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by the quake as you can see here. will: check this, the earth move for us. rachel: charlie painter is live with the latest. >> reporter: we can expect more shake, rattle and roll as tremors continue to rock the region after friday morning's 4. 8 magnitude earthquake startling millions of people across hundreds of miles in multiple states. the us geological survey says the epicenter originated near lebanon, new jersey, 50 miles from new york city and hours later, a 4.0 magnitude aftershock hit the town in gladstone, new jersey and they have the big apple all shook up. bouncing the studio cameras at fox news headquarters, even though it was the biggest tri-state area earthquake in one hundred 40 years, fortunately there were no reports of major damage or
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injuries but the rare event had many people talking. >> we felt what is going on? we haven't had an earthquake in so long we were surprised it happened. >> a lot of people warning me what's going on with the subways, i was not expecting an earthquake. >> never in new york but something new and exciting in new york. >> reporter: experts warned there's a 40% chance of a slew of other significant tremors that could occur in the region but in the next week, beyond the lookout. pete: the follow-up one. will: we were not here for the first one. i wasn't here for the second. apparently i was but felt nothing. i was here for both and didn't feel either either. rachel: i was seven miles from the epicenter and it freaked the heck out of us. i was glad sean was home and he
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immediately said i froze. interesting to see how you react when something happens. i froze. will: what are you supposed to do? runaround? rachel: when you are in an earthquake you should get out of the house. will: what of the room you're in wasn't going to fall? rachel: everyone said get out so that is what we did. was that the right advice? pete: you should get onto the ground under our table, cover your head, hold onto something. this lasted -- hold on to the table or something so it doesn't move away from you and you have more protection. that is what you should do. if you can. it also adds in 15 seconds it was short-lived. i felt all of it. i was more excited than anything. i always wanted to be in an earthquake. also worried, finally i'm in an earthquake but also it wasn't that bad.
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4.8, but felt for a lot of people, 15 aftershocks, continue to see those for the next week or two, and should be as strong as the 4.8 yesterday at 6:00. how often do these happen? almost 140 years since the greater new york city area has seen an earthquake like this. something this strong. there's a fault line. how does this happen here? there's a fault line that cuts through new jersey so there are fault lines across manhattan. that means you could have movement. what generally happens with an earthquake on the east coast versus the west coast, it is felt by a larger expanse of area. in 2,011 there was this earthquake in central virginia. this is the area that felt the earthquake. in 2004 there was an earthquake in california, 6.0, the area
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that felt that, the earth's core, the crust is smoother, alder, gravity waves can move faster and further across the land than they can across the west. you feel it across the east a lot more. 14 states experienced this, areas from maryland through new england, new jersey exactly where you were. there was strong shaking on the earthquake intensity scale, that would have been a different experience in manhattan. rachel: we thought there was an explosion, there's a gas main, we thought they hit something. sounds like a train going through. i thought it was interesting to see how our family did in an emergency. >> i think your kids are downstairs. rachel: we have our ring
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camera. will: i did live in california for a while, i was there for the northridge earthquake. this is a small shake. the other thing to your point, there's more faultlines than people realize, they are not just in california or the northeast, they run through oklahoma, field tremors from time to time. >> we are nowhere near the atlantic plate. i don't remember that. that meets across the atlantic ocean. the pacific plate and north america plate on the west coast, more of an active zone. there are fault lines across the east. you could get them anywhere to be honest. rachel: you said the kids are downstairs. you see margarita, science project, we heard a lot about,
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info, fourth-grade info was great. pete: where were you when the earthquake happened? rachel: where was he? rachel: you are not supposed to ask? >> you were the one on tape at 6 am? i had just gone into the restroom. it happens in the morning. had my coffee. had gone to the restroom. there you go. rachel: did i cause this earthquake? thank you. i am sorry, it's because i love you so much. speaking of the northeast. there's a connecticut democrat who has new legislation that is proposed in that state and she amended to move the phrasing in
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this bill from pregnant person back to expectant mother. a connecticut democrat which i think is notable. rachel: it is on a woman trying to erase women. pete: she's trying to say -- rachel: trying to do like what? pete: we are talking the language of the bill, it said this, quote, shall create a strategic plan to maximize federal and state services for children 6 years old and younger. their caregivers, and pregnant persons. that is what the original bill said. pete: robin porter called to amend that back to expectant mothers. >> i understand why i using pregnant persons and i'm fine with that. but i as a woman with a womb
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identify as an expectant mother. so do other women. my children call me mother, mom, but something along those lines and that is what i answer to. i don't answer to pregnant person or birthing person. that's not what i answer to. a huge part of my identity is wrapped around being a mother and grandmother. a huge part of my identity. so i find it an affront that someone would try to tell me that what they are putting on paper for the purpose of policy, i am telling you it doesn't. rachel: i don't, i don't want to say identify with her because the first part where she says i identify as a mother but the last part where she
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says my identity is wrapped up in being a mom i feel that way too. people would say to me, first thing i would say to describe myself as i am a woman and a mother. i don't want anyone taking that away from me but she's a democrat and this is part of a decade-long experiment by feminists in particular to make this a genderless world and now that it is coming to fruition, it is resulting in women having men play against them in sports and everything else, they started this and now they are having to go back and say i want my title back. will: it is still really contorted, she can't just say i'm a biological mother. she says i identify as an expectant mother, it's all very pained, i understand why you would say pregnant person but i identify when it is still in
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the realm of how i identify there is no objective truth being applied, whose feelings are more important. pete: it's notable the insanity is not total. that is being pushed on -- >> it intentional to make you say things you know aren't true. we are not birthing persons, we are moms. will: let's turn to additional headlines. first finding and gaza after president biden faces questions over support for israel. in the jewish state's war. >> are you abandoning israel. are you abandoning israel. are you abandoning israel? why not -- the cease-fire?
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pete: the white house is preparing for a potential retaliatory attack by iran on israel after striking the islamic republic's consulate in syria. senior us officials say they expect an iranian attack in the next week. a judge tossing out a lawsuit from a group of squatters after they tried to sue a queens homeowner. quarter try to claim they were unlawfully removed from a million-dollar home using a shake shack receipt as proof. the rightful owner says lawmakers need to take action. >> i don't feel i have the full justice in this case because these are people that broke into my house and claimed it to have some property there and not let these squatters when because that's not just, that's not the american dream. >> the property was given back to the homeowner, the squatters ordered to remove their belongings.
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and the rock conducting his grandmother into the wwe hall of fame last night, she was one of the first female wrestling promoters ever. >> they were all send their talent to my grandmother and she had the biggest stars in the world would come to hawaii from andre the giant to rick laird to the generics. >> we will have more from my one hour sit down with the rock on "fox and friends," those are your headlines. we will be right back.
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will: laying off dozens of employees to comply with a new state law that dissolves dei institutions. here to discuss is the author of senate bill 17, brandon creighton. with already seen the implementation at the university of texas, do you expect how quickly we see this at other public universities, the dissolution of their dei department?
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>> our flagship university announced $10 million in salary reductions to be terminated this week, i expect them to follow the university of texas, we see a letter from the education committee requiring compliance with the new law and even have clawback position if universities don't comply. we have hearings just in a few weeks and universities, chancellors and board of regents are getting ready for those hearings to make sure they can explain they've taken this new law seriously. will: i am concerned about compliance. you hear about the clawbacks, that the punishment but how do you discover? one of the fears people should rationally have is dei will just be reconstituted throughout the universities in other ways in different names, broken up with in other departments.
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how do you ensure you don't continue with the ideology of dei? >> those promises of clawbacks through texas state budget, that's a powerful incentive. we want to make sure these dei offices are removed from campuses permanently, there will be no reauthorizing, renaming or relaunching the dei efforts under other strategies and we are intent on the senate education committee in texas to make sure we achieve exactly that. how do we make sure? i think universities are cleaning house as we speak, university of texas removed all of those positions following a letter from the senate education committee, we have the strongest bill in the nation and expect those clawback provisions for the entire university to matter.
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will: why was it important to do away with dei? >> with head diversity, equity and inclusion units, 379 employees at university of texas alone earning $10 million a year. we've seen data on minority faculty recruitment and hiring showing that hiring and the outcomes were going backwards under dei. we've seen professors in texas terminated for pledging to treat every student equally, we've seen asian american students excluded from dei strategies and political leftist loyalty oath required, every professor applying for a job. we are not going to stand for that in texas, that the chilling effect on free >> if you have exclusivity with free-speech you have no inclusion at if you have no inclusion dei has failed and needs to be removed.
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dei a big moment in texas. appreciate you letting us know about this new bill and its implementation. in the great state. great to see you, thank you so much. and illegal migrant arrested countless times is charged with murder. the ohio share for he was arrested is blaming broken border and he's next. meanwhile, at a vrbo... when other vacation rentals aren't what they're cracked up to be, try one where you'll know what you get. (psst! psst!) ahhh! with flonase, allergies don't have to be scary. spray flonase sensimist daily for non-drowsy long lasting relief in a scent free, gentle mist. flonase all good. also, try our allergy headache and nighttime pills.
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rachel: an illegal immigrant who has been deported 8 times and visited jail four times facing murder charges in ohio. herman garcia gutierrez was arrested for the mystic violence, racked up assault, carrying a concealed weapon, public indecency and drug possession charges. he's is also a suspected
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member of a gang who used 7 different aliases, three different birthdates. our next guest sounding the alarm saying the border is broken and got to stop this invasion. richard jones joins us now. first of all someone is getting your county because this person has been able to reenter the country time and again. how do you stop this? >> mayorkas says the borders clean and safe. he's the main person. president biden is another person but mayorkas is the main person who says everything is great and wonderful. got to stop the borders. this guy murdered somebody, killed somebody. he has been arrested for weapons before, the most ludicrous thing you've ever seen, the border is wide open. we are in ohio, mexico, we had
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a thousand prisoners in our jail from other countries. we've had murderers, sex crimes. these are people that shouldn't be here, this guy shouldn't be here. what i have been encouraging people to do, mayorkas, need to sue him personally, he won't always work for the president, anyone who has been a victim murdered, sex crime, have been injured should start suing mayorkas. is not always going to work for the president. to him personally. that will make it stop. rachel: does he show up again? is that how the process ends up working? >> a lot of times if it is small charges, ice will come get him, deport him, and they come back, only takes a week and 1/2 to get back, this guy, i'm not certain he has not
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killed others. he has had other charges, he comes right back across, to sell his fentanyl, poison to the people in ohio, he comes right back and he's got friends and family here, his compadres, it's destroying our country and i will save this. his parole officer by the time we get done with him isn't even born yet. that is how long he will be in prison. >> could he get to the vetting process if he is interdicted at the border? >> the only vetting process they do is give them a citation and five years come back, go to court, get rid of their id before they come over. they don't want anybody to know who they are and that's part of it. they keep them and give them a
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little cell phone will, a little money and a bus to where they are going, you don't see them walking or hitchhiking, somebody picks them up, coyotes do on this side of the country, pick them up, take them all throughout the united states and that is what they are doing. when you stop these people there's 3300 county sheriff's. we are not the only one that has this issue. i promise you it is all over the country and it is out of control. people are dying. we have one guy in another state that took a 15-year-old with him who was also a minor that was placed here by our government with another illegal and her boyfriend was having sex with her, they put her in an apartment at 14 years old and they fled. we heard back. he is still waiting on charges of kidnapping in ohio. in ohio. in ohio.
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pete: it's a process they are helping to happen and you are having to deal with it in your county, thanks for throwing the book at this guy and everything you are trying to do, appreciate having you this morning. moving on. the biden administration canceled plans to refill the emergency oil reserve, the national concerns on that. jen z is becoming the toolbelt generation, talking to the founder of a welding academy undergraduate on the benefits of that coming up next. >> missouri, colorado. >> virginia. ll done, viv. you got the presents, the balloons and the raptor cake. now, how about something to put a smile on your face? aspen dental provides complete, affordable care with dentists and labs in one place
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will: get ready for -- [laughter] rachel: just go with it. pete: i love it. will: let me read my thing. going for the toolbelt generation young americans skipping out on college, embracing blue-collar trade jobs. pete: students in vocational community college up 16%, student studying construction trades up 23%. car repairs, up 7%.
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rachel: joining me is the founder of western academy graduate and james carter, welcome to you both. it's a bit hectic getting into this segment but we are here and glad you are. james, why did you decide to be a welder? >> i was turning wrenches with my dad when i got out of high school, noticed welders were making more money than me so i saw a video on tiktok and decided that was the place for me to go. rachel: it's funny. i talked to my son about welding and this is something people don't realize, let's talk about the kind of living you can make being the welder. a lot of people don't realize what a good career choice this is for many. >> yes, sir. i live comfortably for 20-year-old, that's for sure.
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will: are you the exception to the rule or do we have a generation that waking up to what their financial future is going to look like and if they don't have a skill like this where they can earn they are in trouble? >> you have. the big thing to know is this country was founded on the backs of blue-collar people and will continue to live and thrive as long as we have enough young people in these trades. pete: what do people need to consider good careers? >> plumbers, electricians, machinists, mechanics, they are all superimportant, the welders are the most important. i might be a little bit biased. we believe that if we don't invest in the youth, who will? things of this nation.
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rachel: i was reading your point of view, what i found interesting was you had your parents support. i know that's important. i was living in a manufacturing town for a long time that was looking for workers and they said they didn't just try to recruit workers, they had to bring in their parents to get them comfortable with the idea of going to the trades versus college. wire your parents so supportive, how did they got on board, any thoughts on that? >> i come from a generational caller family. wasn't hard to talk my dad into sending me to welding school. i sat down with him and my mom and talked over what i wanted my future to look like and they supported that. >> thanks for being a voice for blue collar jen zers. thank you for being here. tyler could be your brother.
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will: rachel: he looks similar to you. pete: why we were laughing when we come in, pete's chair wasn't here. what happened is they tried to take a shot that didn't show that we were sitting here by ourselves but -- will: i was streaming in, no chair, somebody didn't want me. will: you were kneeling next to me. rachel: seconds before. by the way, really interesting that tiktok and social media is a way to bring in the use jen z young kids. social media in general, whatever platforms they are using, a new way of reaching young people. pete: live pretty comfortably for a 20-year-old. to your headlines starting with this. people lucky to be alive after their small plane dropped from
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the sky east of tampa. >> oh my gosh. an actual airplane. >> it has a parachute, paraglider. pete: i don't know what specific models. a parachute deploys, soften the landing yesterday afternoon. people who saw the crash rushed off, people were trapped inside. amazingly they only suffered minor injuries. a man who lives near the crash site telling one local outfit, quote, the angel was on their shoulders, no doubt. a federal judge scolding the justice department yesterday for allowing lawyers involved in the hunter biden probe to defy subpoenas issued in president biden's impeachment inquiry saying there's a person in jail now because you brought a criminal lawsuit against him because he did not appear for
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house subpoena, now you guys are flouting those subpoenas, the judge ordering lawyers from the judiciary committee to negotiate, i'm sure that will go great. a pig in years i had police officers going hogwild trying to stop it from causing chaos, check this out. [squealing] pete: police caught several pigs who were out on the loose in the area over the past week, their owner has not come forward, pigs are on the loose. rachel: they pets? >> i don't know if that pig is often far more pet but those things become feral fast, they breed. we have a big problem. i grew up in the country in texas we didn't have a pig problem.
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my family sent me a video the other day. a massive herd of pigs tore up the entire property, they destroyed everything. open season on pigs. pete: my brother-in-law with helicopters and ar and all that, it's all legal. will: hunting rifles, they are pigs. rachel: all right. pete: fighting learning loss with christian values. how one book fair aims to make reading cool again. at ameriprise financial, more than 9 out of 10 of our clients are likely to recommend us. our neighbors, the garcía's, love working with you. because the advice we give is personalized, -hey, john reese, jr. -how's your father doing? to help reach your goals with confidence. my sister's told me so much about you. that's why it's more than advice worth listening to.
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people couldn't see my potential. so i had to show them. i've run this place for 20 years, but i still need to prove that i'm more than what you see on paper.
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today i'm the ceo of my own company. it's the way my mind works. i have a very mechanical brain. why are we not rethinking this? i am more... i'm more than who i am on paper. rachel: welcome back to "fox and friends". following the pandemic student literacy as well as interest in reading has fallen due to learning loss and the content of required reading in public schools. our next guest has been trying to curb this for years featuring book fairs with christian values. found around ceo of good news book fair, great to have you on today. you have been doing book fairs as an alternative to scholastic which as a mom i've had
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problems with in terms of what kinds of material, lack of age-appropriate material in so many magazine so tell us about good books and what it is doing in schools. >> we are excited to be here today to share with you the good news of what we are doing and good news is all about instilling the joy of reading for students and they realize reading is not just a classroom assignment. reading is entertainment and most important we that all books to make sure they are clean reads, fun and inspiring as well. rachel: reading levels drop during covid in the lockdown, you would think kids locked inside would have been reading but they weren't, they were on the screens, the need to get good books in front of them, your organization good news and the book fair, that's the books for schools, parents, correct?
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>> yes, and we choose books, we have a cure ration process composed of parents, authors and librarians concerned with what kids are reading and they read every book and go by our guidelines. does it have positive values, is it fun, is it inspiring, does it have anything inappropriate, foul language, graphic violence, sexual content, we pick books that are appropriate, that are going to be fun and engaging for kids. we are headquartered in florida with the second distribution in ohio and meet demand all around the country. rachel: how can a school organization bring good books to their event? >> reach out to us on our website, goodnews sobo bookfair.com and we bring excitement to reading to students and a fundraiser for the school for their library
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and we bring authors to do presentations, book signings, make reading fun again. rachel: it is a great cause. parents are worried about what schools are putting in front of them and what organizations like scholastic are approving of and really grateful you have the good news book fair, wonderful organization vetting books for parents and schools to make it is sure it is age-appropriate and fun. thank you, you're doing great work, thank you. >> anyone who wants to reach us to get their book fair into the schools or donate so we can reach more schools, please reach out to was, but goodnewsbookfair.com. jens he is turning to speed dating, that story and my pop-culture roundup in the next hour. t. (other money manager) different how? you sell high commission investment products, right? (fisher investments) nope. fisher avoids them. (other money manager) well, you must earn commissions on trades.
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